This question came to my mind while browsing the forum. What's your reading speed? And let's take the average Pratchett novel as an example (around the 350 pages). Not a cheap thriller, not an extremely pretentious literary book with sentences with an identity crisis (a sentence? a paragraph? a passage? what am i? ). Discworld gives you plenty to think about, yet Terry's style always stays approachable and quite light (in a positive way!).

I'm always baffled when people tell me they read a book on the plain, in the train or my favorite - overnight/in a day. Of course, an obvious factor here is reading experience: people who read a lot tend to read faster. Still, I can't imagine finishing a book so fast.

So tell me, how long does it take you to finish a discworld novel? What factors are involved? Are there different types of reading and how does that influence your reading experience? Maybe your reading routine or even the place you read at also make a difference, or how many books you read at the same time?

For me it's a week if I read before sleeping, and 4-5 days if i'm really focused and into it. Though I usually read different things at the same time. Your turn!

"...my father is the Emperor of Klatch and my mother is a small tray of raspberry puddings."

Depends. I buy the Hardcover DW books, meaning I don't take it with me on the train. Read it in about three sessions over a week. I breeze through paperbacks since I can read those anywhere (used to be known for reading books while walking the dog).

While reading Snuff I did find I had to go back half a page to reread something since I realised my eyes had gone over the words but it didn't stick (in the evening after work, this is bound to happen). During lazy summer holidays I read about a book per day. Nothing heavy though, stuff like Michael Crichton, Christopher Moore, Jasper Fforde and such.

Scientists are predicting the future will be much more futuristic than originally predicted

It entirely depends on the book and my mood. At my fastest, when I was in hospital, I was getting through a book and a half a day. Those were mostly Bernard Cornwell books - so about the same as a Pratchett.

I've read the later Harry Potter books in less than 24 hours and a new Pratchett will generally only take a couple of days max.

But then I go through periods where I just can't get going with any book and it can take weeks to read quite a short book.

“Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions.” – Blaise Pascal

I read mostly at work. As a courier it's kinda a "hurry up and wait" job, but instead of waiting I read - always carry a book with me, often two if I'm likely to finish the first during the day. While I'm having a coffee or a sandwich or waiting for a lift or sitting in a reception area or on the kerb by the side of the road in the few minutes between tourists asking for directions or sitting on my bike at a level crossing waiting for the go I'll pull my current book out of my bag and read a page or two... if I don't I get bored or angry or more likely both.

Depends on the book though, I'd probably burn through a Prattchett in a couple of days

Why don't you knock it off with them negative waves? Why don't you dig how beautiful it is out here? Why don't you say something righteous and hopeful for a change? ~~ Oddball

One thing I will say about Discworld books is that although they tend to be quick reads, they need to be reread at a more leisurely pace as there is so much in them that you are likely to miss on the first read through.

The story is often deceptively simple and it's only with a subsequent reading that the 'real' story is revealed. It's part of the reason I wasn't impressed with Monstrous Regiment the first time. I actually didn't think very much of it at all until I reread it and started to ask myself questions.

Terry often uses the Discworld to put across an important point that is much more related to our own world. I think some people miss that point when they get bogged down on technicalities such as the way a character behaves or the way the city works. It's not a real world and therefore doesn't always conform to the same natural laws as our world.

“Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions.” – Blaise Pascal

Depends but i tend to rad on the bus in and out of work and manage about 60-70 pages on each leg. If i read at night it'd be the same again but i've read faster at need if i expect someone to spoil the book on me. On holiday i'd average a book a day

'There is no future for e-books, because they are not books. E-books smell like burned fuel.'Ray Bradbury (RIP)

Tonyblack wrote:One thing I will say about Discworld books is that although they tend to be quick reads, they need to be reread at a more leisurely pace as there is so much in them that you are likely to miss on the first read through.

The story is often deceptively simple and it's only with a subsequent reading that the 'real' story is revealed. It's part of the reason I wasn't impressed with Monstrous Regiment the first time. I actually didn't think very much of it at all until I reread it and started to ask myself questions.

Terry often uses the Discworld to put across an important point that is much more related to our own world. I think some people miss that point when they get bogged down on technicalities such as the way a character behaves or the way the city works. It's not a real world and therefore doesn't always conform to the same natural laws as our world.

Spot on post Tony, I agree with you. Discworld books need to be read a few times to get the full scope of what Terry is trying to get across in his novels and is one reason I like the books so much as you can enjoy reading them over and over again.

Well i read all of night watch yesterday (i'd just got the black cover version in the post) so urrrrm an afternoon and an evening including an hour for dinner and another for a bit of internet browsing.

My reading speed is always the same but if i'm not enjoying it i generally don't bother with it after 80 pages or so.

It's all about the sun master, white snow and red blood and the sun. Always has been.

It depends on how much I'm enjoying the book.I've found myself finishing a book, to find it's four in the morning sometimes. Who needs sleep anyways. *passes out and hits keyboard but still somehow manages to click the submit button* hjkdftgvjkgbnxdv

“We are all in the gutter,but some of us are looking at the stars.”- Oscar Wilde